NON-CONTACT OPTICAL FIBER CONNECTOR COMPONENT
20170248761 · 2017-08-31
Inventors
Cpc classification
G02B6/3882
PHYSICS
G02B6/25
PHYSICS
G02B6/3885
PHYSICS
Y10T29/49826
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
G02B6/3847
PHYSICS
International classification
G02B6/25
PHYSICS
Abstract
An optical fiber connector component that is useful for joining and connecting fiber cables, particularly in the field. A joinder component includes a fiber ferrule coaxially housing a short section of optical fiber with a rearward flanged sleeve that allows the fiber to extend through it. Rearwardly the flanged sleeve extends into a connector body where a fusion splice of the fiber section to the main fiber cable is hidden. Forwardly, the fiber facet and ferrule have anti-reflection coatings and are configured so that the fiber has an output facet recessed slightly relative to the forward polished end surface of the ferrule so that when two ferrule end surfaces are brought together in an adapter, respective fiber facets are slightly spaced apart thereby avoiding wear on fiber facets due to physical contact, yet having good optical communication.
Claims
1. A multi-fiber optical connection between single mode optical fibers comprising: a first ferrule block having a first front surface, the first ferrule block adjacently surrounding a plurality of first fiber alignment holes within the first ferrule block; a plurality of first single mode optical fibers, each first fiber being situated in respective first fiber alignment holes and terminating with a fiber facet recessed from the first front surface of the first ferrule block at a distance of approximately 0.1 micron to several microns; an anti-reflection coating overlaying each first fiber facet and the front surface of the first ferrule block; a second ferrule block having a second front surface, the second ferrule block adjacently surrounding a plurality of second fiber alignment holes within the second ferrule block; a plurality of second single mode optical fibers, each second fiber being situated in respective second fiber alignment holes; wherein the front surface of the first ferrule block contacts the front surface of the second ferrule block when the first ferrule block is mated to the second ferrule block, the contact portions of the first and second ferrule blocks being immediately adjacent and surrounding the respective first and second single mode optical fibers.
2. The multi-fiber optical connection of claim 1 further comprising a deposit on the first ferrule block.
3. The multi-fiber optical connection of claim 2 wherein the deposit on the first ferrule block is a metal deposit.
4. The multi-fiber optical connection of claim 1 wherein said plurality of optical fibers has an axis, with the fiber facet of at least one of the plurality of optical fibers being substantially non-perpendicular to said fiber axis.
5. The multi-fiber optical connection of claim 1 further comprising at least two apertures in said first ferrule block and at least two guide pins in the second ferrule block for aligning the first ferrule block with the second ferrule block.
6. The multi-fiber optical connection of claim 1 further comprising fusion splices in at least the first single mode optical fibers distal to the first fiber facets.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0023] With reference to
[0024]
[0025] We now describe the non-contact fiber connector component in
[0026] The fiber ferrule assemblies are then polished at the light output end so as to render a smooth surface 17 on the ferrule 10. The polish angle, measured as tilt from vertical at the fiber core, where vertical is perpendicular to the fiber axis, can be zero degrees, or non-zero degrees to minimize back reflection. In a preferred embodiment, the polish angle is 8 degrees. Just as in conventional fiber connectors where the connector ferrule surface is a convex surface, ferrule front surface 17 should be convex as well.
Differential Polishing
[0027] The polishing process for non-contact fiber connectors in this invention is very similar to conventional connector polishing, except the final polishing step. After a fiber stub removal step, a series of progressively finer lapping films are used to polish the connector surface, typically from 9 micron, 3 micron, to 1 micron diamond particles. Final polish step is then performed.
[0028] The final polishing step in this invention is different from conventional connector polishing, and is the step responsible for forming the recess in the fiber. In this step, the fiber is preferentially and differentially polished relative to the ferrule front surface so as to create a recess between the fiber facet 13 and ferrule front face 17. The recess range should be kept as small as possible to reduce optical coupling loss, while ensuring no physical contact between the opposing fiber facets when mated.
[0029] For a single mode fiber SMF-28, the light beam is best described as a Gaussian beam. In air, the working distance (Rayleigh range) is about 100 microns. If the fiber recess is 0.5 micron, light from the fiber core traveling twice the recess length does not expand sufficiently to induce significant optical coupling loss. The extent of a recess is preferably in the range of 0.1 microns to several microns.
[0030] The recessed fiber facet 13 in
[0031] Finally, an AR coating 40 is applied to the polished surface of the fiber 13 and front surface of the ferrule 17. The operating wavelength range of the AR coating determines the operating wavelength range of the non-contact optical fiber connector in this invention.
[0032] In a preferred embodiment, many polished fiber ferrule assemblies are loaded into a vacuum coating chamber and coated with a multi-layer stack of dielectric materials. Numerous AR coating processes can be used. For example, the coating method can be ion beam sputtering or ion-assisted e-beam deposition. Care should be taken to prevent significant amount of the coating material from getting on the sidewall of the ferrule cylindrical surface, by suitable masking. Otherwise the material will alter the precision diameter of the ferrule, and cause flaking off of coating material which will affect connector performance.
[0033] The fiber cables to be coated in an AR coating chamber must not outgas significantly in a vacuum chamber. We have observed that the inclusion of a mere ten 0.9 mm loose-tube buffered cables in the chamber can lengthen the vacuum pumping time from 2 hours to more than ten hours for ion beam sputtering. The materials of the fiber cable must be chosen carefully to reduce outgassing. Bare fibers housed in ferrules in the AR coating chamber are optimal.
[0034]
[0035] We have polished more than 500 non-contact fiber connectors with zero scratches, which is very different from the final polish step of conventional connectors where scratches are frequent and inspection and repolishing are required. As a result, 100% inspection of connector polishing after final polish step becomes unnecessary which can save significant manual labor cost.
Non-Contact Fiber Connector Performance
[0036] Several hundred non-contact fiber connectors with recessed fiber facets have been made to date with great manufacturing yield. Both zero degree and 8° angled non-contact (ANC) single mode fiber connectors were made.
[0037] The insertion loss of both zero degree and 8° ANC connectors shows nearly identical loss distribution to that of conventional fiber connectors. The insertion loss in all three cases is dominated by the errors in the fiber core positions due to geometrical tolerances.
[0038] A mated pair of zero degree NC connectors has about 30 dB return loss, while a mated pair of 8 degree ANC connectors has more than 70 dB return loss, or about 10 dB higher return loss than conventional 8 degree APC connectors.
[0039] Both NC and ANC connectors have essentially guaranteed insertion loss performance in random mating. Therefore, an ANC connector is the preferred connector because it has superior return loss performance.
[0040] We have tested a pair of ANC connectors and found it lasted through 10,000 matings with less than 0.01 dB insertion loss change from the beginning of the test to the end.
[0041] The non-contact fiber connector of the type shown in
[0042]
[0043] In this embodiment, the fiber ferrule assembly can be polished using a conventional connector polishing process. The result of this polishing process is that the fiber is at the apex of the convex surface. The polishing angle can be zero degrees or 8 degrees. The metal coating can be accomplished by a suitable masking operation so that the metal does not cover the fiber surface. Note that the AR coating 40 covers both the output facet 13 of the fiber 20 and the front surface 17 of ferrule 10.
[0044] In conventional connector cables, frequently a long length of reinforced fiber cable is used between two optical fiber connectors. For example, one of the most used fiber cable is a 3 mm diameter cable with Kevlar fabric reinforcement. Such a cable will outgas greatly in a vacuum chamber, occupy too much room and difficult to manage inside the AR coating chamber. Clearly AR coating entire fiber connector cables in an AR coating chamber is not an option.
[0045] Instead, only the most essential part of the connector with very short length fiber should be loaded in. After AR coating, such short fiber should be connected to the long, reinforced cable by fusion splicing, which is a very reliable and relatively low cost fiber connection method.
[0046] Splice-on connectors are known in the prior art. These are conventional connectors that have factory-polished connector surfaces with a short length of cleaved fiber at the rear of the connector head ready for fusion splicing to a long length of typically reinforced fiber cable.
[0047]
[0048] In
[0049]
[0050] The non-contact fiber connector operating principle established above can be used for multi-fiber connectors as well, such as MT type array connectors.
[0051]
[0052] When a multi-fiber connection is made using two non-contact multi-fiber connectors as in
[0053] Fiber facets 720 can be offset from ferrule block front surface by a number of means. Selective etching, differential polishing, metal deposition, or simply deforming the polished ferrule surface can all achieve non-contact of fiber facets. In all cases, small gaps between facing fibers can communicate optical signals from fiber cables to mating cables. The facets can have a slight angle, say 8 degrees.